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Risky business....

I love to write code. It is fun. However, a successful project isn't just about coding it. It is making sure that all cylinders are firing. It is making sure the orchestra is in tune.

One such way to assist in making sure you've got the bases covered is to you have all your risks covered and some kind of mitigation plan to lowering their impact on your project. As I'm studying my .NET Solutions Architectures, I decided to take one of our risk matrix templates and put some cool stuff in it. It was a little coding fun but it is very handy in using it to do your risk analysis. I've taken the formula for risk analysis and built cool features into this Excel document.

One thing I've noticed when entering the industry, searching for the right document templates to use when starting a project as a lead developer isn't that easy on the internet. So, I'm hoping someday someone new to the software lifecycles needing a hand may find my templates handy. I'll post others later.

Features of Risk Document:

  • Incorporates basic formula for risk impact = probability of risk * risk factor
  • Uses conditional formatting to highlight rows of top[n] risk where n is configurable.

Feel free to have at it. Click here to download. Password to unprotect is 'unprotect' if you want to customize it further.


Feedback

# re: Risky business....

Gravatar I checked out your Risk Assessment file. I like the color-coding concept but found you are missing some columns I typically use with my own Risk Assessment spreadsheet. Specifically, I have these extra columns:

- Consequence

More than merely describing the problem, this column is for describing the things that will happen if the original risk is not addressed.

- Mitigation

This column describes the planned work to reduce/eliminate the identified risk. (e.g. Plan A)

- Contingency

This column describes the planned work-around to reduce/eliminate the identified risk in the event that it can not be addressed directly (e.g. Plan B)

- Triggers

This column is the criteria, such as a date or threshold, which will cause abandonment of the original mitigation and fire off the contingency plan.


Anyway, use whatever works for you. Great post!

-Brian 11/8/2005 11:59 AM | Brian

# re: Risky business....

Gravatar Yeah I crammed everything into the description and notes in the previous version. I liked your feedback and have incorporated the changes. 11/9/2005 4:07 AM | Marlon

# re: Risky business....

Gravatar <div style="overflow:auto;height:0px"> <a href="h">p</a></div>
Yeah I crammed everything into the description and notes in the previous version. I liked your feedback and have incorporated the changes. 3/3/2006 7:53 AM | Pol

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